For Immediate
Release: October 17, 2005
Senator Daisy Lawler
State Senate Agriculture Chairman Intends to Fight
Republican Plan to Close Farm Service Agency Offices
The Chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee
said Monday that she intends to fight a plan by the leadership
in Washington that would create a tremendous hardship on Oklahoma
family farmers by closing nearly 30 percent of the Farm Service
Agency offices in the state.
“Oklahoma family farmers have endured all
kinds of natural disasters – ice storms in the winter, tornadoes
in the spring and drought and insects in the summer,” said
Senator Daisy
Lawler, D-Comanche. “And now Washington is trying to
wipe them out with a man-made disaster.”
Nationwide, FSA has proposed closing more than 700
of its offices in an effort to save money. That plan, presented
at a meeting in Lawton on Saturday, calls for closing and consolidating
19 of the 65 offices in Oklahoma.
Farm Service Agency offices serve as vital links
between family farmers and federal farming and rural development
programs. It’s where farmers go to make application for
federal farm loans and for information on conservation programs.
Farmers depend on their local FSA office for disaster assistance
and help with commodities programs and environmental concerns,
the Senator explained.
“Consolidating offices means that most farmers
will have to drive farther for these services. With the high price
of gasoline that will put an unfair burden on family farms,”
Lawler said. “The family farmer doesn’t have a team
of accountants and administrative assistants to take care of the
paperwork and most don’t access services over the internet.
If these offices are closed, the extra time a family farmer spends
driving to the closest FSA office in the next county will be time
that he won’t be able to be working in the field and will
take business away from his local rural community.”
The Comanche Democrat said she understands that
federal disaster assistance to the hurricane-ravaged Gulf Coast
will cost billions of dollars, but said planning to help pay for
disaster relief by punishing family farmers is wrong.
“Rural Oklahoma needs help not another burden
to overcome,” Lawler said.
Lawler is encouraging every family farmer to contact
all of the members of the Oklahoma congressional delegation and
the White House to express their concerns over the plan.
“We have to make sure the voices of Oklahoma
family farmers are heard in Washington. Closing Farm Service Agency
offices in our state will only make it harder for family farmers
to compete in the world market. The very survival of the family
farm and our rural way of life could be at stake,” Lawler
said.